by Matt Binder 2019-02- 24 17:19:50 U. Humans, a species of giant tortoise, was found on Galápagos Island Fernandina.

According to a report, an adult woman, commonly known as the Fernandina Giant Tortoise, was discovered on Sunday, February 17, 2019. The tortoise's life was last seen alive in 1906. The International Conservation Organization had endangered the turtle as critical and possibly extinct.

The turtle is said to be healthy but underweight. It is believed to be about 100 years old. According to them, it is "only about one-half to two-thirds of the size" of the only other Fernandina giant tortoise ever found 113 years ago by a deceased man.

The rangers and biologists took Park Ranger over a three-mile stretch of hardened lava flow, "where experts believed the turtle could possibly inhabit. Led by Tortoise Scat, the team uncovered a bedstead and found the giant turtle buried deep under a brush pile sheltering from the sun.

The Giant Tortoise was transferred to the Fausto Llerena Tortoise Breeding Center on the Galapagos Island of Santa Cruz.

There may also be more good news. Based on turtle cats and traces on Fernandina Island, it is hoped that this particular animal is not the only Fernandina Giant Tortoise living on the island.

The Fernandina Giant Tortoise was found by the Directorate of Galápagos National Park (GNPD) and the US Galápagos Conservancy.

The search for the turtle on Fernandina, the third largest of the Galápagos Islands, took place for the series Extinct or Alive . The network says that the episode that documents the entire expedition will be premiered in the summer of 2019.

Means are already earmarked for future expeditions to find a partner for the female turtle that can help protect the endangered species.